Title: ECONOMICS 251H Households, Firms
1ECONOMICS 251HHouseholds, Firms
MarketsSpring 1999
2ECONOMICS IS ABOUT DECIDING
- Economists do not restrict themselves to
considering only decision problems involving
money and markets, though that is a big part of
economics.
3EXAMPLES OF SOME DECISIONS ECONOMISTS HAVE
ANALYZED
- Whether to buy a car this week.
- Whether to have pizza for dinner tonight, or
something else. - Whether to marry your sweetheart.
- How hard to study for this course.
- Whether to go to college, and if so, which one.
- Whether to buy a lottery ticket in the Michigan
lottery.
4Factors in decision making
- 1. People face tradeoffs.
- 2. Opportunity cost.
- 3. Making decisions at the margin.
- 4. People respond to incentives.
5How individual decisions affect others
- 5. Trade (exchange) can benefit everyone.
- 6. Markets are often a good way to organize
exchange. - 7. Government can sometimes improve on
- markets.
6MICROECONOMIC AGENTS
- Firms
- Produce and sell goods and services
- Buy inputs (labor, capital raw materials)
- Consumers
- Buy goods and services
- Sell inputs (labor services, loanable funds)
7Methodology Positive v. Normative Economics
- Positive econ. -- Studies the way the world is.
- How much will a new gasoline tax raise the price
of gasoline? - Will an increase in the minimum wage increase
unemployment? - Why is the price of corn 4.20 per bushel?
- How much will a drought in the corn belt raise
the price of corn? Of wheat? - What will be the effect on Byron Browns pizza
consumption if we take 1000 away from Tom Izzo
and give it to Brown?
8Methodology Positive v. Normative Economics
- Normative econ. -- Studies the way the world
should be. - Should there be a new tax on gasoline?
- Should there be an increase in the minimum wage?
- Should 1000 be taken from M. Peter McPherson and
given to Byron Brown? - What should the price of corn be?
9THE PARETO CRITERION
- A rule used by economists to decide whether a
change in the world results in an increase in
social welfare (the welfare of society as a
whole). - The importance of the rule is that we can use it
to evaluate policy changes. It would be in
societys interest to adopt those policies that
improve social welfare and reject those policies
that reduce social welfare.
10THE PARETO CRITERION DEFINED
- A change improves social welfare if as a result
of the change at least one person is better off
and no one is worse off.
11PARETO CRITERION NOTES
- Its the only value judgment economists use in
their official role as scientists. - Not all changes can be judged using the criterion
(changes in income distribution) - Its a very conservative rule -- equivalent to
demanding unanimity to adopt a policy. - Effectively banishes from economics as a
discipline the question of how income ought to be
distributed.
12PARETO OPTIMALITY
- A state of the world is Pareto Optimal if no
improvements are possible as judged by the Pareto
Criterion. - A Pareto Optimal state is sometimes called
efficient or Pareto efficient. - When we are in an efficient state it is
impossible to make someone better off without
hurting someone else. - Of course, its better to be efficient than
inefficient.
13ECONOMISTS USES FOR THE IDEA OF PARETO OPTIMALITY
- We will show how the market form called monopoly
is inefficient, while that called perfect
competition is often efficient. - We will analyze the efficiency of some kinds of
taxes. - We will show why the presence of externalities or
neighborhood effects causes inefficiency. - We will explore some of the proposed cures for
inefficiency.
14Models and theories
- Model -- a hypothesis about the relationships
among variables. - Everyone uses models.
- Because a model abstracts from reality it makes
mistakes. - Models can contain two kinds of errors or
mistakes - the wrong explanatory variables may be included.
- the functional form may be incorrect.
15Contents of models
- List of variables, especially a clear statement
of what is to be explained - Dependent v. independent variables
- Hypothesized relationships among the variables.
- Using tables of values, graphs, or equations.
16A model of heights
? H
height
?A
H a b(A)
?H
a
b
?A
age in years
17A better (nonlinear) model of heights
fancy
height
age in years
18A better model?
- Height f(age, gender, parents heights,
nutrition, ...)
19Gender effects in the better model
- Height f(age, gender, parents heights,
nutrition, ...)
men
women
height
age
20MODEL SUMMARY
- Three ways to describe models
- Graphs
- Tables of values
- Mathematical functions (equations)
- Important concepts
- Dependent and independent variables
- Linear function, intercept and slope
21AN ECONOMIC MODELThe Production Possibility Curve
- Purposes of model
- Show scarcity constraint
- Illustrate economic efficiency
- Introduce opportunity cost concept
- Variables
- Quantities of goods that may be produced
- Givens
- Total amounts of inputs available
- Technology of production
22PPF DEFINED
- The Production Possibility Curve (or frontier)
shows the maximum amount of a good you can
produce given the amounts of other goods
produced, and given the total amounts of inputs
available, and given the technology of production.
23PPC EXAMPLE
- Assumptions
- There are only two goods, pizza and spaghetti.
- There are limited inputs and given technology of
production. - Definition
- The PPC shows the maximum amount of pizza you can
produce, given the amount of spaghetti to be
produced.
24PRODUCTION POSSIBILITY CURVE
SPAGHETTI
400
Which points are attainable and which points are
unattainable?
300
200
100
0
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
PIZZA
Go to hidden slide
25PRODUCTION POSSIBILITY CURVE
SPAGHETTI
400
300
unattainable
200
100
attainable
0
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
PIZZA
26PRODUCTION POSSIBILITY CURVE
SPAGHETTI
400
Whats the effect of an improvement in the
technology for producing spaghetti?
300
200
100
0
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
PIZZA
Go to hidden slide
27An improvement in spaghetti technology
SPAGHETTI
400
300
200
100
0
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
PIZZA
28PRODUCTION POSSIBILITY CURVE
SPAGHETTI
400
Whats the effect of an increase in total
resources (inputs)?
300
200
100
0
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
PIZZA
Go to hidden slide
29Effect of an increase in resources.
SPAGHETTI
400
300
200
100
0
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
PIZZA
30- Points inside the PPC are inefficient.
- For any point inside there corresponds some
point that represents more production of both
goods. - Note that while points on the PPC are efficient,
we cannot say at this time whether some are
better for society than others.
31OPPORTUNITY COST DEFINED
- The opportunity cost of doing something is what
you must give up in order to do it. - The cost of a pizza is what you must give up to
consume it, which in this case is easily computed
in money. - The cost of a college education includes both
money and other foregone alternatives. For
example, the cost of a year at MSU includes not
only tuition and books, but the income you could
have earned working on a full time job. - The cost of attending a Lugnuts baseball game
includes the value of the time you could have
spent studying economics.
32The PPC can show opportunity cost
- Suppose you are at some point on a PPC.
- Then suppose you want to consume one more pizza.
- The opportunity cost of one more pizza is the
amount of spaghetti you must give up in order to
get it. - Note that this opportunity cost is equal to minus
the slope of the PPC.
33PRODUCTION POSSIBILITY CURVE
SPAGHETTI
400
300
More pizza means less spaghetti
200
100
0
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
PIZZA
34OPPORTUNITY COST INCREASES AS MORE OF A GOOD IS
PRODUCED
- Not only does more pizza mean less spaghetti, but
each additional pizza costs more than the one
before it. - This idea shows up as the PPC being concave to
the origin. (The curve bows out.)
35Production Possibility Curve
SPAGHETTI
400
Opportunity cost of more pizza is constant.
300
200
100
0
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
PIZZA
36- We will use Production Possibilities Curves that
are straight lines (i.e., that have constant
opportunity cost) to illustrate some important
economic principles.